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Lordgalla
New Member
- Oct 26, 2014
- 12
- North Adams,MA.
- Oct 31, 2014
- #1
Hi all,
I notice there is a T-stat on the United States Stove company parts section.Is this 5502m Pellet stove capable of having a T-stat put on it? If so how would it work? Would it shut down when it got to temperature in the room,and then restart when calling for heat? If this is how it would work,what about the adding pellets at the shutdown thing,and adding more pellets when starting, then has to many pellets? I know it's a mouth full,but someone must know something about this stove.The manual is useless,and the company does not answer emails.Thankyou to anyone who can help me on all of this .
TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 1, 2014
- #2
I have no insight on your particular stove but heres how mine works. When the room reaches the set temperature, the stove will go into a very low burn state just enough to keep a flame going. When the thermostat calls for heat again, the stove returns to is previous burn level. If the stove stays in its low state for more than an hour, it will shut down completely then restart once the thermostat calls for heat again.
Im not quite sure I understand your question about adding pellets but you can refill the hopper whenever you need whether the stove is on or off.
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Lordgalla
New Member
- Oct 26, 2014
- 12
- North Adams,MA.
- Nov 1, 2014
- #3
TimfromMA said:
I have no insight on your particular stove but heres how mine works. When the room reaches the set temperature, the stove will go into a very low burn state just enough to keep a flame going. When the thermostat calls for heat again, the stove returns to is previous burn level. If the stove stays in its low state for more than an hour, it will shut down completely then restart once the thermostat calls for heat again.
Im not quite sure I understand your question about adding pellets but you can refill the hopper whenever you need whether the stove is on or off.
Hi there,
It adds pellets to the burn pot inside the door on shutdown,and then adds pellets to the burn pot again,when it starts up again.Resulting in to many pellets in the pot on start up.At least I think so anyway?
TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 1, 2014
- #4
When it's shutting down, pellets should no longer feed
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Lordgalla
New Member
- Oct 26, 2014
- 12
- North Adams,MA.
- Nov 1, 2014
- #5
TimfromMA said:
When it's shutting down, pellets should no longer feed
they do,as soon as the fans shut down,pellets are added to the burn pot.Unless I open the lid to stop them,others on hear are saying this is normal?
TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 1, 2014
- #6
I cant speak specifically for your stove but it sounds odd.
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Lordgalla
New Member
- Oct 26, 2014
- 12
- North Adams,MA.
- Nov 1, 2014
- #7
TimfromMA said:
I cant speak specifically for your stove but it sounds odd.
ya it does to me to,maybe someone will be able to answer this.Thanks for trying.
Owen1508
Minister of Fire
- Jan 21, 2014
- 643
- Memphis TN
- Nov 3, 2014
- #8
It goes though a purge during shutdown. Once it gets below operating temp it will purge pellets in the auger tube to help prevent burnback. The cycle is 15mins. If during that cycle the feed (glass) door is opened the 15 min cycle will reset. As far as lifting the hopper lid to stop this. I would rather see you do it during start up then shutdown as the purge is a safety feature. Having the burn pot round 3/4 fill during start up is quite OK.
As far as the thermostat. The Thermostat recommended is a millivolt one. Connect the leads to the two post on the control board labeled T-Stat. The attached should help.
As far as operation; when the thermostat calls for heat the unit will ramp up to what ever preset HR it was on, when the thermostat is satisfied it will lower to the lowest setting and maintain a fire until the thermostat calls for heat again.
Attachments
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Johnny_Fiv3Johnny_Fiv3
Feeling the Heat
- Oct 12, 2014
- 339
- North Rose, NY
- Nov 3, 2014
- #9
Can a wireless thermostat be used? Running the wire to my stove may not be feasible due to it's location.
TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 3, 2014
- #10
Johnny_Fiv3 said:
Can a wireless thermostat be used? Running the wire to my stove may not be feasible due to it's location.
If your stove is capable of running on an external thermostat, it will work equally well either wired or wireless.
Reactions:
Owen1508 and Johnny_Fiv3Johnny_Fiv3
Feeling the Heat
- Oct 12, 2014
- 339
- North Rose, NY
- Nov 3, 2014
- #11
Thanks Tim. I wasn't sure if there was a difference or not since I've always used hard wired t-stats on my furnaces.
Reactions:
Owen1508TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 3, 2014
- #12
I use this one with my stove:
Reactions:
Owen1508L
Lordgalla
New Member
- Oct 26, 2014
- 12
- North Adams,MA.
- Nov 3, 2014
- #13
Owen1508 said:
It goes though a purge during shutdown. Once it gets below operating temp it will purge pellets in the auger tube to help prevent burnback. The cycle is 15mins. If during that cycle the feed (glass) door is opened the 15 min cycle will reset. As far as lifting the hopper lid to stop this. I would rather see you do it during start up then shutdown as the purge is a safety feature. Having the burn pot round 3/4 fill during start up is quite OK.
As far as the thermostat. The Thermostat recommended is a millivolt one. Connect the leads to the two post on the control board labeled T-Stat. The attached should help.
As far as operation; when the thermostat calls for heat the unit will ramp up to what ever preset HR it was on, when the thermostat is satisfied it will lower to the lowest setting and maintain a fire until the thermostat calls for heat again.
thankyou,for the great info. If I am running the stove on heat range 1 all the time,will the stove shut down when t-stat is up to temp,and then restart when calling for heat? or does it just ramp down to 1 and stay on continuously?
Owen1508
Minister of Fire
- Jan 21, 2014
- 643
- Memphis TN
- Nov 3, 2014
- #14
Lordgalla said:
thankyou,for the great info. If I am running the stove on heat range 1 all the time,will the stove shut down when t-stat is up to temp,and then restart when calling for heat? or does it just ramp down to 1 and stay on continuously?
Just ramp down to one
Johnny_Fiv3
Feeling the Heat
- Oct 12, 2014
- 339
- North Rose, NY
- Nov 4, 2014
- #15
The ramping down to HR-1 and staying lit is why in the coldest room I have (master bedroom/bathroom area) I installed a second t-stat that fires the blower on my furnace. The pellet stove t-stat is in the living room which is kitty-corner across the house from the pellet stove. I set it to 72°F and once the room drops below that, the stove ramps up. The bedroom t-stat is set to 68°F and once it drops below that, the furnace blower kicks on mixing the air around in the house. I find that this helps keep that air mixed and eliminates the cold air feeling near the floor. My house is a drafty 1800's job so mixing that cold air with the warmer air makes a big difference in how warm the house feels. Also the living room may be at 72°F with the stove on HR-1, but the bedroom may drop due to the layout of the house. I am seriously considering an OAK now though let me tell you. The stove did however greatly assist in chasing down drafts and sealing them up!
EDIT: Once the t-stat is hooked up the HR setting doesn't matter. Removing that jumper makes it so it just listens to the call for heat. The stove will do whatever it needs to in order to answer that call and then ramp down to HR-1 once there.
Owen1508
Minister of Fire
- Jan 21, 2014
- 643
- Memphis TN
- Nov 4, 2014
- #16
Johnny_Fiv3 said:
The ramping down to HR-1 and staying lit is why in the coldest room I have (master bedroom/bathroom area) I installed a second t-stat that fires the blower on my furnace. The pellet stove t-stat is in the living room which is kitty-corner across the house from the pellet stove. I set it to 72°F and once the room drops below that, the stove ramps up. The bedroom t-stat is set to 68°F and once it drops below that, the furnace blower kicks on mixing the air around in the house. I find that this helps keep that air mixed and eliminates the cold air feeling near the floor. My house is a drafty 1800's job so mixing that cold air with the warmer air makes a big difference in how warm the house feels. Also the living room may be at 72°F with the stove on HR-1, but the bedroom may drop due to the layout of the house. I am seriously considering an OAK now though let me tell you. The stove did however greatly assist in chasing down drafts and sealing them up!
An OAK will help that as well. By not using the heated air in the house for combustion and then sending it out the vent pipe, it will slow some of the leaky drafts.
Johnny_Fiv3
Feeling the Heat
- Oct 12, 2014
- 339
- North Rose, NY
- Nov 4, 2014
- #17
LOL oh I know that now! Looks like it's going to be spring before I can afford to do that however. So, for now, I will weather strip, caulk, foam, stuff insulation, etc, etc.
TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 4, 2014
- #18
My OAK kit cost $50 and I installed it myself in a couple hours.
Johnny_Fiv3
Feeling the Heat
- Oct 12, 2014
- 339
- North Rose, NY
- Nov 4, 2014
- #19
Which one was it. I see several online, but not sure which one to get...
TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 4, 2014
- #20
Johnny_Fiv3 said:
Which one was it. I see several online, but not sure which one to get...
We have different model stoves. The one for mine might not fit yours but here it is anyways.
http://www.ventingpipe.com/duravent...ipe-double-wall-fresh-air-intake-kit/p1760884
Johnny_Fiv3
Feeling the Heat
- Oct 12, 2014
- 339
- North Rose, NY
- Nov 4, 2014
- #21
That one will work no issues with my stove. What I am trying to see is does that kit come with the interior wall plate as well?
TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 4, 2014
- #22
Johnny_Fiv3 said:
That one will work no issues with my stove. What I am trying to see is does that kit come with the interior wall plate as well?
Yes it does. Here are a few photos of mine.
Outside view:
Inside view. You can see the wall plate.
Inside view with OAK pipe insulated.
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Johnny_Fiv3Johnny_Fiv3
Feeling the Heat
- Oct 12, 2014
- 339
- North Rose, NY
- Nov 4, 2014
- #23
Thank you so much!
What did you use to cut the hole in through the wall? Just a hole saw on a drill?
TimfromMA
Minister of Fire
- Mar 6, 2014
- 2,306
- Central MA
- Nov 4, 2014
- #24
Johnny_Fiv3 said:
Thank you so much!
What did you use to cut the hole in through the wall? Just a hole saw on a drill?
Yes, and a dremel tool to cut away the siding underneath the exterior face place and a little bit of silicone to make it all weather tight.
Reactions:
Johnny_Fiv3Johnny_Fiv3
Feeling the Heat
- Oct 12, 2014
- 339
- North Rose, NY
- Nov 4, 2014
- #25
3" hole saw?
Sorry for all the questions, but I think I may do this sooner than later since this kit is much cheaper than what I was expecting